Hey, I've been around here long enough to know that 3/8" tubing will hurt flow measurably and therefore increase temps, but hear me out on this...
On my new rig, I'm going to run a loop dedicated for the CPU. I'll use 7/16" on this loop for sure. In fact, on my bench setup, I'm already using this loop to stabilize my overclock with good success.
When I'm done on the bench, the other loop will cool the Digital PWM, the NB, SB, GPU (8800GTX with EK FC block), and my water cooled PSU. The main intent of the second loop is to eliminate noise while providing enough cooling to maintain overclocks. I don't need record temps... I just need "enough" cooling.
Question is, will a separate loop with a DDC Ultra, PA-120.2 and the above mentioned blocks likely have enough cooling capacity to beat air cooling even with 3/8" tubing?
The thing is, I'm meeting my stable OC objectives with good air cooling on these components on the bench now, so I'm assuming (hopefully correctly) that when I switch to water, even with 3/8" tubing on the secondary loop, it will be better than the air cooling I'm using now.
Why not just use 7/16" all around?... I could do that and may still, but if I go with 3/8" tubing, I can use some much more attractive compression fittings instead of ugly barbs. I can't use compression fittings with 7/16 or 1/2 because the locking rings will interfer with each other because the fittings will be too close together on most of these small secondary blocks. It will also be somewhat tidier and less cluttered looking loop with slightly smaller tubing.
The bottom line is, can I exchange a bit of cooling performance for some cosmetic improvements without actually loosing any system performance?
Bookmarks